Britain’s best brunch venues | Daily Mail Online

Revealed: Britain’s best brunch venues, from an authentic spot in London’s Borough Market to health-conscious cafe in Cheshire

  • From a full English to French toast, here’s the spots serving delicious brunch
  • The Ned in London is the place to go for New York-inspired brunch   
  • Brunches include flour-free pancakes at Real Food Kitchen in Cheshire 

Every week our Holiday Hero Neil Simpson takes an in-depth look at a brilliant holiday topic, doing all the leg-work so you don’t have to. This week: Britain’s best brunch venues.

Bank on New York style

Safe bet: Former bank The Ned, which serves a New York-inspired brunch 

Walk the marble floors of the City of London’s former Midland Bank – now sprinkled with Soho House stardust and transformed into hotel and restaurant complex The Ned – for a New York-inspired brunch including waffles, French toast and ‘Lower East Side’ bagels. There’s also the £13 ‘full English our way’ (challah bread and pastrami in place of bacon).

Quick tip: After brunch, check out the 25-ton steel door that once guarded £335million in the bank’s vault (thened.com).

Maria’s real deal

For the ultimate authentic experience find Maria’s Cafe in London’s Borough Market. It’s so old-school it doesn’t have a website. Think egg, bacon and chips for £4 offered by someone who’s worked in the market since she was seven.

Quick tip: It’s busy, so it is frowned upon to linger, but look out for famous faces. Maria’s poured tea for Charles and Camilla.

Battle through a Warrior

Local owners of Waylands Yard in Worcester and Birmingham promise ‘a game-changing brunch’. Take your time with a full, Warrior Breakfast (£11.95), a veggie fry-up or active oats soaked for 24 hours and topped with anything from blueberries to peanut butter. Staff are serious about good coffee.

Quick tip: Look out for cafe dog Kobe, who flits between both locations (waylandsyard.com).

Singing its own praises

Brunch at Foxy's Deli, above, includes Glamorgan sausage sandwiches, ‘Breakfast in Bread’ or Welsh crumpets topped with bacon, oats and fried eggs

Brunch at Foxy’s Deli, above, includes Glamorgan sausage sandwiches, ‘Breakfast in Bread’ or Welsh crumpets topped with bacon, oats and fried eggs

It’s a rare cafe that has its own choir. But Foxy’s Deli in Penarth has. Its singers meet weekly, amid a programme of community events and classes. Brunch includes Glamorgan sausage sandwiches, ‘Breakfast in Bread’ or Welsh crumpets topped with bacon, oats and fried eggs for £6.

Quick tip: Gift hampers let you share the love of Welsh food. The cafe also serves Welsh-inspired afternoon teas (foxysdeli.co.uk). 

Savour the sunshine

Expect brunch packed with fruits, grains and colourful ingredients at Real Food Kitchen in Neston, Cheshire. It’s run by a family who’ve banned processed foods from their menu and brunches include flour-free pancakes, Scandinavian-style rosti and ‘sunshine oatmeal’ with pineapple, mango, maple syrup and mint for £4.95.

Quick tip: Take a cookery workshop ending with a sit-down meal prepared by the class (realfoodkitchen365.com).

The Quay to success

It calls itself ‘a small coffee house underneath a big bridge’. So head below the Tyne Bridge in Newcastle’s Quayside area to find Quay Ingredient where you can go back to basics with a boiled egg and soldiers, or try kippers with lemon parsley butter or cinnamon pancakes with chocolate.

Quick tip: Stay local with a £3.95 bacon, sausage and fried egg stottie: a Northumbrian classic (quayingredient.co.uk).

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